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GDC 2011: Gaikai's Cloud Gaming Now Live With Four EA Demos

Gaikai announced that its cloud-based games streaming service is now live with a public beta, and has made demos for four popular Electronic Arts-published titles available for users to start playing in their browsers.

Eric Caoili, Blogger

February 28, 2011

1 Min Read

Gaikai announced that its cloud-based games streaming service is now live with a public beta, and has made demos for four popular Electronic Arts-published titles available for users to start playing in their browsers. The EA demos, which are hosted remotely on Gaikai's servers but can be played on most web browsers with the latest versions of Flash and Java installed, include the PC editions of Dead Space 2, Mass Effect 2, Spore, and The Sims 3. The company also has a demo available for Linden Labs' virtual world Second Life. Gaikai's service is modeled after YouTube, enabling users with broadband connections to stream and play modern games without needing to download large files, install the title, or download/install patches. The firm says it's so far managed to get 30 to 40 titles across a variety of genres running on its service. CEO David Perry said Gaikai is featuring EA games because of their popularity: "We've been working away with them as we discover how to reduce the friction when playing products. We've been keeping quiet, but we've secretly been up and running for months, quietly, testing, collecting analytics, improving things, etc." Gaikai claims that its network has "the fastest interactive proximity network in the world", and its service is now live and working in 12 countries across 24 data centers. The company says its primary focus now is its advertising strategy, and its next phase is embedding Gaikai into gaming websites. At the Game Developers Conference in San Francisco this week, Gaikai will demonstrate "high-end, high-performance games running at 60hz with no work needing to be done by the publishers / developers", as well as Mass Effext 2 running inside Facebook.

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About the Author(s)

Eric Caoili

Blogger

Eric Caoili currently serves as a news editor for Gamasutra, and has helmed numerous other UBM Techweb Game Network sites all now long-dead, including GameSetWatch. He is also co-editor for beloved handheld gaming blog Tiny Cartridge, and has contributed to Joystiq, Winamp, GamePro, and 4 Color Rebellion.

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